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Cash to speed up Victoria’s COVID vaccine rollout

September 27, 2021 BY

A more significant easing of restrictions will occur when the 80 per cent double-dose vaccination target is met, forecast for November 5. Photo: BARWON HEALTH

GENERAL practitioners and community pharmacies in Melbourne suburbs hardest hit by COVID-19 will be able to apply for grants of up to $10,000 to speed up the vaccination rollout.

Today (Monday, September 27), Premier Daniel Andrews announced more than 100 grants of up to $4,000 and 10 grants of $10,000 for GPs and pharmacies in 11 local government areas (LGAs) with the highest number of infections and the lowest vaccination rates.

Those LGAs are Brimbank, Cardinia, Casey, Darebin, Greater Dandenong, Hobsons Bay, Hume, Melton, Moreland, Whittlesea and Wyndham.

Mr Andrews said the grants would allow GPs and pharmacies to operate additional hours, hire more staff or rent out space to run their own vaccination hubs.

“For a relatively modest investment, we get a huge return. More and more people vaccinated means less people in hospital, our community and economy open sooner,” Mr Andrews said.

Expressions of interest for the grants will open this week, with the funding to be distributed from Monday next week.

Melbourne’s lockdown will remain in place until 70 per cent of Victorians aged over 16 are double-vaccinated, which is forecast for October 26.

A more significant easing of restrictions will occur when the 80 per cent double-dose target is met, forecast for November 5.

Mr Andrews said the state was looking at shortening the interval between first and second doses of Pfizer vaccines at vaccination hubs, which is currently set at six weeks, but needed certainty on supply from the federal government before doing so.

“If we can get that certainty of vaccine supply then we may be able to bring those forward and that would help us reach 70 per cent double-dose faster and in turn, 80 per cent double-dose faster as well,” he said.

Victoria recorded 705 new locally acquired cases on Monday and one death, a man in his 70s from the local government area of Darebin. It brings the toll from the present outbreak to 25.

Mr Andrews said more than 80 per cent of the new infections were aged under 50, with a quarter aged in their 20s.

The new infections bring the number of active cases in the state to 8538, including 363 people in hospital and 75 in intensive care, of whom 56 are on a ventilator.

More than 78 per cent of Victorians aged 16 and over have now had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, while 47.7 per cent have had two doses.

It comes as restrictions will ease slightly across the state on Wednesday this week, with Victoria expected to pass 80 per cent single-dose vaccination coverage tomorrow (Tuesday, September 28).

Residents of locked-down areas will be able to travel 15km from home, up from 10km, while patron caps in regional venues will increase from 20 to 30.

Golf, tennis and cricket, as well as group personal training for up to five fully vaccinated adults, can also resume.

There was also good news for the City of Greater Geelong, which was released from lockdown overnight, despite the diagnosis of six new cases on Saturday. All cases were linked.

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